William and Mary Law Review - 2017
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- The power canons.
- THE CONJUNCTION PROBLEM AND THE LOGIC OF JURY FINDINGS.
- A case of overcorrection: how the FTC's regulation of "unfair acts and practices" is unfair to small businesses.
- Data-driven discrimination at work.
- ADMINISTRATIVE DISSENTS.
- Legislative exhaustion.
- Rethinking corporate governance for a bondholder financed, systemically risky world.
- SOCIAL VALUE ORIENTATION AND THE LAW.
- EQUAL LIBERTY IN PROPORTION.
- Exploring the boundaries of Obergefell.
- THE LAST FRONTIER OF DISENFRANCHISEMENT: A FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT FOR INDIVIDUALS WITH COGNITIVE DISABILITIES.
- The commercial difference.
- Much ado about nothing: signing statements, vetoes, and presidential constitutional interpretation.
- Judicial departmentalism: an introduction.
- THE INFORMATION-FORCING DILEMMA IN DAMAGES LAW.
- Forcing players to walk the plank: why end user license agreements improperly control players' rights regarding microtransactions in video games.
- Why Congress does not challenge judicial supremacy.
- PLEADING PATENT INFRINGEMENT: RES IPSA LOQUITUR AS A GUIDE.
- iTENANT: HOW THE LAW SHOULD TREAT RENTAL RELATIONSHIPS IN THE SHARING ECONOMY.
- Lessons from Ferguson on individual defense representation as a tool of systemic reform.
- RETHINKING PREEMPTION AND CONSTITUTIONAL PARAMETERS IN BANKRUPTCY.
- The annoying Constitution: implications for the allocation of interpretive authority.
- Soft supremacy.
- Netflix and Quill: using access and consumption to create a plan for taxing the cloud.
- In defense of judicial supremacy.
- Judicial supremacy revisited: independent constitutional authority in American constitutional law and practice.
- HISTORIC DISTRICTS: PRESERVING THE OLD WITH THE COMPATIBLE NEW.
- Buying happiness: property, acquisition, and subjective well-being.
- DESIGNED TO FAIL: THE PRESIDENT'S DEFERENCE TO THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE IN ADVANCING CRIMINAL JUSTICE REFORM.
- Reliance on nonenforcement.
- Indefiniteness as an invalidity defense.
- Judicial supremacy and taking conflicting rights seriously.
- THE NATURE OF SEQUENTIAL INNOVATION.
- Protean statutory interpretation in the courts of appeals.
- Pricing the Fourth Amendment.
- Personal enough for protection: the Fifth Amendment and single-member LLCS.
- The problem of creative collaboration.